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News

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Thomas Vinje, Legal Counsel and Spokesperson for ECIS, provided the following official statement shortly after the February 21 announcement by Microsoft pertaining to interoperability, intellectual property rights and open source software.

Microsoft said it will open up the application programming interfaces
of Office 2007 to outside software programmers so that different
document formats, such as ODF, can be the
default. Gray Knowlton, group product manager for the Microsoft Office
system, reiterated Microsoft's position that's Open XML, ODF, and other
formats should coexist.

The European Commission and its member states have been mulling a
mandate that all government documents be created in the Open Document
Format (ODF)... Representatives from standards bodies in some 37 countries are meeting
in Geneva this week to discuss whether Microsoft's OOXML format should
be designated as open by ISO. If ISO fails to approve OOXML as a
standard, Microsoft could lose more customers than just European
governments.

The debate over the OOXML format and the
competing ODF is still alive and kicking, but
Microsoft just wants everyone to get along. The software giant has been lobbying for its OOXML format's
ratification as an ISO standard at a ballot resolution meeting in
Geneva later this month, after a failed attempt in September last year. Its opposers support ISO-certified ODF, seen as a close rival of
OOXML, but Microsoft says polarizing the discussion into ODF and OOXML
camps "trivializes" it.

Zaheda Bhorat, Open Source Programs Manager of Google, writes: The subject of open document standards grows in importance not only for
the technically- minded, but for anyone who uses a computer to work on
editable documents. Across the board, standards are crucial. They
ensure that the devices and technology you use today will continue to
work tomorrow, that your DVDs will play in your player, that your calls
will go through to any network, and that your documents will be
accessible from whichever system you choose today and in the future.